- This is a very nice project! Thank you for creating it and sharing it here on HN. I like the minimal version more but the modern version is quite nice too. I would probably stick to the minimal version but since it seems to lack the search feature I end up using the modern version for that.
By the way, some minor issues I found:
1. In the minimal version, when browsing the list of blogs I cannot get past page 12. The last page the UI lets me navigate to is https://text.blogosphere.app/blogs-12 which shows blogs up to names starting with 'M'. I can reach page 13 by manually editing the URL to https://text.blogosphere.app/blogs-13 which shows two blogs starting with 'N'. However, pages 14 and beyond just load the home page. Surely there are more blogs with names starting with 'O', 'P', etc.?
2. The modern version at https://blogosphere.app/ uses infinite scroll, which makes it impossible to reach the footer. Each time I scroll down, more content loads and pushes the footer further away. I was only able to view the footer by modifying the DOM in the browser's developer tools. It would be nice if there were a straightforward way to access the footer.
by Hard_Space
10 subcomments
- Incredible that we are regressing back to webrings and hand-curated lists like this, both of which I remember well. That's not a criticism! I guess that the quality-drop in search wasn't quite enough to make it happen, but the advent of AI content predomination will be.
by glenstein
1 subcomments
- Love this! I very much appreciate the inclusion of a lightweight version, as I think lightweight discovery for blogs and the small web is where good tools and apps are needed.
Also, given that the lightweight version is very hn styled format it naturally leads my brain to imagining a version with upvotes and commenters (which may be a good or a bad thing) but with the link submission part automated. Not necessarily the intent here but it was the first time that particular combination of possibilities occurred to me as a way to do things.
Also curious about how these blogs are indexed/reviewed. Is the list ever pruned over time due to inactivity?
by nelsonfigueroa
3 subcomments
- Ooooh I love these indie web aggregators. I wrote about some of my favorite ones here if anyone's curious: https://nelson.cloud/how-i-discover-new-blogs/.
But here are some of my fav ways to discover blogs:
- https://minifeed.net/welcome
- https://indieblog.page/
- https://1mb.club/
- https://512kb.club/
- https://250kb.club/
- I always thought the "planets"[1][2][3] were a neat idea. I wish there were more of them for dedicated topics. Then I can just subscribe to specific planets which pulls curated feeds from various blogs on that topic.
[1] Planet Gnome: https://planet.gnome.org/
[2] Planet Debian: https://planet.debian.org/
[3] Planet GNU: https://planet.gnu.org/
by jasoneckert
2 subcomments
- This is great, thanks! It sort of feels like browsing for gems in a used bookstore and stumbling onto authentic, personal writing. I'm always up for that, and plan on spending plenty of time exploring the list.
I’ve submitted mine as well - cheers!
by colejhudson
1 subcomments
- Lovely!
Those who enjoy this might also like:
- https://kagi.com/smallweb
- https://blogroll.org/
- https://minifeed.net/welcome
- https://ooh.directory/
- Very clean site, well done. I’ve built something similar, but it also has an algorithmic front page option as well based on the “standard” algorithm from Reddit/HN: https://engineered.at
I also have it wired up to gpt nano for topic extraction and summary creation per post, if you register for an account (free) you can also follow sources and topics to fine tune things.
I have a big list of features to continue adding to it, like an ability to “claim” your site so you can get some analytics from the site, and potentially to boost your site in the algorithm. Might also add a jobs board.
If you’re interested, while this site is closed source, the feed monitoring rails engine is open source: https://github.com/dchuk/source_monitor
- This is great. But I’ve bookmarked at least 10 of these aggregators over the years, and I never revisit any of them. Partly because I don’t have the time to browse and discover new content.
I also don’t read the blog spam from prolific writers who pop up here every two days, especially the low-quality ones constantly yapping about AI. So the number of blogs I revisit is a handful, and I have a page on my site listing them [1]. Some of the blogs I’ve listed also have backlinks to my site. It’s super simple and works fairly well for me. Plus there’s rss.
[1]: https://rednafi.com/blogroll/
- I've come to the conclusion that Hacker News is the best aggregator out there. Substack knows my interests yet gives terrible recommendations. Youtube constantly recommends the same videos or exaggerates my interest in a topic based on a few views, spamming me with related content until I watch something unrelated. The only downside of Hacker News is that its focus is narrower than other sites. But perhaps because the focus is "Anything that good hackers would find interesting" there is a bias towards things I find interesting with less noise than more commercial offerings.
- That's a great idea and a very nice project. It's great that to move back to curated blog lists from thoughtful authors.
I've been doing something similar specific to my interests so far. Will check yours out.
Here's my "Planet AI": https://grokify.github.io/planet-ai/
And some selected article/discussion analysis: https://grokify.github.io/frontierpulse/
- This is a very useful project. Thank you for taking it on!
I just spent at least 30 minutes reading instead of mindless scrolling. This reminded me of the good feelings I had when I first used the web. The content is novel and written for the authors enjoyment. The web was better for people then and you just recreated that.
I like the minimal version better, but it is hard to use on mobile. If there was a way that you could make a minimal version with better accessibility and larger fonts, I’d use that. Until then, I’ve bookmarked the modern version.
- I see the footer, then it disappears - (next scroll kicks in) - see foot, disappears, repeat.. (desktop, firefox)
It's time we bring back webrings and optional auto-check for recip links - with options to check for nofollow and do a thing or not.
Webring code anyone can self host - have notification and approval and accept nofollow links as okay by default should work fine.
Thinking of them getting bigger, might need to give surfers and option to sort by tags / categories / newest / oldest.
have option for website owner to prioritize or highlight a few as first seen each month..
- There's also this: https://minifeed.net/global
However, I think (text.)Blogosphere has a nicer interface, personally. Maybe I'm just used to HN.
- Vaguely related, I did an extremely basic RSS feed combiner ages ago: https://hn-blogs.kronis.dev/ when there was that one post where people could share their blogs and many of those had RSS feeds.
That said, it got its list of feeds from the repo that someone made which hasn't been updated in a few years, so even if new blog content gets pulled, the list of blogs doesn't change. Oh well, wasn't a super serious project.
- Nice job. A small suggestion, unless I completely missed it, an option to filter by post / blog language.
by carte_blanche
0 subcomment
- Looks nice!
It's getting hard to keep up with all the recent posts on indie web aggregators (a good problem to have!). I've observed that I always get excited about seeing one such tool -> try to make it a habit to visit those aggregators occasionally -> forget about them -> rinse and repeat.
A great execution on the problem of discovery within the blogosphere is Wander, which was posted here a few days ago - https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=47422759. I discover great, small websites not because I found them in any aggregator's list, but more often via someone whose opinions I trust recommended a particular post to me. Wander executes on that idea rather brilliantly.
I've found myself going to my Wander console[^1] more regularly now and I keep finding great folks to follow.
[^1]: https://www.siddharthagolu.com/wander/
by Imustaskforhelp
0 subcomment
- Yes!! I found a new website to use :-)
I just hope if you can add dark-mode, I use hackernews essential which adds dark mode and more features which I really like in hackernews, Perhaps something like this can be added but overall I really like it!
You have (essentially) just made something which I imagined 2 years ago:
https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=41789661: Ask HN: Are you interested in a Hacker News alternative which doesnt focus on AI (Oct 9 2024)
My point, which has only grown to an even larger degree is that Hackernews has too many AI discussions, which both feels a bit fomo to me and also I am seeing AI generated blog posts and comments now on Hackernews as well.
At some point, I want a website where I can talk about the more human aspects, some occasional AI mention is fine but not if a quarter or half of front page is hackernews and some genuinely nice projects don't get the attention :(
I had joined hackernews to read those content pieces and fell in love with the human discussion aspect but now there are definitely moments of browsing hackernews which makes me feel as to what I had written in the ask HN
my last line within the ask HN was: I just want people who don't want the latest ai hype to gather around and discuss some other cool things which are "not" AI. This kind of fits into that
Adding my submissions of blog-posts into it in sometime :) See you there!
by yuppiepuppie
0 subcomment
- I like this new found indie web resurgence! A few months someone posted a directory of blogs, I ended up building https://hnarcade.com and now this :)
Discovery still remains a problem - besides this post on HN how do you plan to get people to visit the site and discover new posts?
I started a newsletter to help with this, but keen to hear ideas.
- Very cool!
We have something similar — asort of “planet” — for personal blogs in Brazil. It's open source, maybe it can be useful for someone: https://github.com/manualdousuario/lerama
Our instance: https://lerama.pcdomanual.com
by londonanon
0 subcomment
- Thank you for making this, the Internet needs more of these. The young ones among us are likely still scratching their heads whilst trying to understand what RSS is...this puts it all together in a neat little package ala Kagi, Blogroll, etc. Good ol' directory-style.
- > Minimal (HN-inspired, fast, static): https://text.blogosphere.app/
Could you add a form submission button next to the filter, so that it doesn't require JavaScript? (Or actually that can probably be done easily enough with some kind of CSS variable-setting trick...?)
- Very cool! Love the minimal design a lot, unsurprisingly.
My Minifeed [1] started with a similar goal of having a "HN for blogs", but then it grew to include search, related recommendations, custom feeds, lists, etc. I don't have categories though.
[1] https://minifeed.net/
by sodapopcan
1 subcomments
- Very nice, this is great! Love that you give the two UX options.
FYI (bug report): In the non-minimal version, navigating by category is janky in FireFox. The logo briefly disappears with the nav jumping up in its place every time you click a category.
by bryanhogan
1 subcomments
- Any plans on adding a way to filter out "lower quality" posts which usually dominate chronologically sorted post lists?
And, possibly a way to filter type of content more in-depth than just one category?
by riceballs_tlp
0 subcomment
- How do you curate the blogs that are being added to this? I see that there's a way to submit your own blog, but was there a list you started with initially? Thanks for making this!
- This is awesome. I find myself seeking out blogs nowadays as many of the best forums have died out and reddit has dropped in quality significantly.
I typically use marginalia and wiby to make finding posts from blogs easier, but I like the idea of providing hn style mechanics to blog posts, so many of which lack the ability to comment/discuss the material. At the same time, while I think this is a useful tool, I am a little weary of the aggregation and consolidation of the web.
by sourcegrift
0 subcomment
- "A woman had sex with identical twins and now it's impossible to tell who is the father", is this a blog post or news or sarcastic news or what the hell
by randusername
0 subcomment
- Great work, I haven't updated my public site in years while I waited for the LLM stuff to play out, but you've inspired me to put it back out there and submit.
by AndrewStephens
0 subcomment
- I love this (and submitted my blog) - people bemoan the death of the Old Web™ but in reality there is still heaps of great content being created.
- I would love a old-school search engine that pulls results purely from a well curated list of websites and blogs.
- Small web, try this one https://bubbles.town
by nextaccountic
1 subcomments
- Question, is this strictly chronological, or is there anything at all to make this an "algorithmic feed" like HN, reddit, twitter, or facebook? (list is roughly in the order of less shitty to more shitty, but note that none of them are chronological, unlike, say, a RSS reader aggregating some set of blogs)
- +1 on this — infinite scroll shouldn’t make parts of the UI unreachable.
A simple “load more” at the footer could solve this cleanly.
by highspeedbus
0 subcomment
- That's great. I wish we could convince more people to use similar tools regularly, myself included.
It may not 'scale' as well as algorithmic feeds, but maybe that's what will save the Web. We need more sweat and passion, both in curation of content and in the effort to find it.
by meander_water
0 subcomment
- Cool idea! I actually did something similar but with ~130k Substack publications (they're just RSS feeds) https://findsubstack.com
by matheusmoreira
1 subcomments
- > If you don't find your blog, please add them.
> RSS / Atom Feed URL *
I really need to implement an RSS/Atom feed in my static site generator, the lack of this feature is really starting to hurt. I can probably get Claude to help me with this.
by LostMyLogin
2 subcomments
- Love this! New homepage for me. Do you have a buy me coffee button to help keep it live?
- I like this kind of idea. Do you require RSS for the listed blogs? curious about the behind.
- Amazing that the minimal version works in Dillo, except for the categories menu which uses JS (using a form and submit button inside a noscript tag would work as a fallback).
- cool stuff. have already found and bookmarked a few interesting sites just going through the list.
submitted my own blog there as well. it is cool seeing human-curated directories coming back (not that they truly left, but i've been seeing more and more over the last few years around the 'indie web')
i do a little something like this on my own site, but it is just a simple directory of sites that i like listed by category on a single page.
by Biologist123
0 subcomment
- Nice. I can see a version of this working for ever more niche areas. Curated reading lists for areas of interest. At which point a curated list of curated lists becomes viable!
by obsidianbases1
1 subcomments
- Something like this is very much needed.
I hope to see more things like this.
What would be really cool is if there was a personalized algorithm (for you page) that stored data and processed locally.
by givemeethekeys
0 subcomment
- This is a great idea. I think you should ask people to pay a subscription for commenting. Turn it into a community supported site from the get go!
- Variety! I appreciate that it's not all tech writing from tech blogs from people in tech like almost every blog list/aggregator thing on HN.
- Very cool!! It's actually full of blogs! I've seen lots of claims for this kind of thing, glad to see you followed through!
- I love it.
I'd love a search bar and maybe a means to sort by popularity (however you define it.)
I like that it's free and clean and direct; I hope it remains that way!
by xtiansimon
0 subcomment
- I see it’s possible to subscribe to RSS from the app, but I can’t find the link on the website.
- Love this! Was the UI done with Claude or some LLM? Not a critique, just curious because the designs give off that vibe to me.
- Sweet! Glad to see so many active personal blogs. We should push to bring back RSS feeds somehow. I really miss that era.
- Superb! Thank you. Psychologically, the minimal version feels perfect; as if it were more connected with the spirit of blogging.
- I love the idea of such frontpages. There should be one for small scale b2c apps as well to help discovery
by paulpauper
0 subcomment
- "All submissions are manually reviewed before appearing in the directory."
it's like the late 90s early 2000s again
- Did you use Frontpage to create your frontpage?
by Johnny_Bonk
1 subcomments
- One recommendation is to keep header fixed on scroll so you can always nav away. most sites fail to do this it seems
- I made something similar, but for Linux news and information! thelinuxreport.com :D
- Thanks for sharing, it's a great idea! but the site is not reachable now, it stuck.
by akshitgaur2005
0 subcomment
- Hey, I am just getting started with blogging, could/should I submit my website too?
- i can't describe how happy this project makes me feel. Honestly, i don't even know why. I mean, the idea is great but it's nothing "extra", still it just feels right. Like breath of fresh air.
- This feels so Yahoo-1994. Love that we are getting back to our origins thanks to AI.
by Discoaaron
0 subcomment
- Love these, please default to follow system theme
- This is great.
I'm curious what's your vision on adding comments?
- Great idea! Could you add a "music" category please for blogs?
by evanjrowley
0 subcomment
- Addition of a "Dark Mode" button would be much appreciated!
- TBH I'd love to see that idea as a /blogs list here at HN.
- Very cool! This was a good impetus to actually add RSS to my blog.
- This is awesome! I'm happy someone made this exist.
by millionclicks
0 subcomment
- Awesome idea. You should launch this on Buildfeed.co.
by robertheadley
1 subcomments
- Great concept, I miss the ability to like things though.
by sebastianconcpt
0 subcomment
- Yeah we need to make curated human signals stronger.
- This doesn't have an RSS feed? bummer
- It's a very modern and clean design.
- FWIW hackr.news has a smallweb filter: https://hcker.news/?smallweb=true
But kudos for different people working on similar good ideas
- No voting? How is it curated?
- Interesting. I submitted mine.
- Great job.
Submitted my blog.
- I love this. THANK YOU.
- give people the ability to curate their own collections and publish them
- scoring will bring spam and voting brigades if not managed properly
by postalcoder
0 subcomment
- If anyone looking for something even more minimalist, give the HN x Small Web RSS feed a try
https://hcker.news/feeds/atom?period=day&limit=50&smallweb=t...
by danielszlaski
0 subcomment
- Nice and clean.
by rafayexalter
0 subcomment
- nice, what stack did you use?
- Cool project.
- Nice project
- I will be that guy: how is this different from HN? Or the many niche subreddits that already do this? I am seriously asking.
To me, it seems like a poor version of subreddits with HN shell to wash it down.
by gray_wolf_99
0 subcomment
- Great idea!
by notanormalnerd
0 subcomment
- Hahahahha... I was trying to build something like this for a while. Seems like I wasn't the only one with this idea. So happy someone finally did it!
by RikiGohain
0 subcomment
- its great
by gorbiesRedScar
0 subcomment
- perfect.
- This is silly.
RSS readers exist. Feed a Fever was even better.
by BrokenCogs
0 subcomment
- Now please build a frontpage for all the frontpages on blogs
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- super dope. now make it infinite scroll and put ads all over the place! /s
by the_axiom
3 subcomments
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by kangraemin
2 subcomments
- [flagged]
- Funny timing — I tried to submit my own Show HN today for a small Linux app I've been building and got blocked because my account is too new. Spent the afternoon reading through HN threads to build up some karma instead. Feels like the indie software equivalent of the same problem this project is trying to solve — it's getting harder for small, genuine projects to find an audience without gaming some system first. Appreciate what you've built here!